These models are very easy to make using:
1. Plastic coffee cups2. Drinking straws with a bendy section3. Sticky tape 4. Sheets of card
Choose what minibeast you want to make and collect a coffee cupbody plan sheet.
1. STICK THE BODY TOGETHERIf the cups are facing the same way, you need to attach a card circle tothem. Cut out the card circles and attach them onto the open end of thecups. Stick in place with sticky tape.
Now you’re ready to stick the body together using the body plan.
2. ADD THE LEGS. Cut the straws to make the legs. Make a hole in the cup with scissors(take care when doing this) and push the legs into the holes, or stick thelegs to the outside of the body using sticky tape.
3. STICK ON THE FACE.Cut out the face and any other parts supplied on the sheets and stickthem on to the animal.
4. DECORATE YOUR COFFEE CUP BUG.Use the coloured sticky tape to decorate your minibeast. You couldeven draw patterns onto paper and stick this on to your model. Don’tforget that if the model is plastic you will not be able to use pens tocolour it.
PAGETWENTYTHREE
MINIBEAST MODELS
MINIBEAST MODELS
Cardboard lid
Sticky Tape
Coffee Cup
Body plans for cup centipedesor millipedes
PAGETWENTY
FOUR
MINIBEAST MODELS
MINIBEAST MODELS
You will need: 5 coffee cups and 5 or 10 straws.Cut around the pictures to complete your bug.
CENTIPEDECentipedes have one pair of legs on each body segment (they have up to80 segments, but you should make a shorter centipede with 5 segments)
MILLIPEDEMillipedes have two pairs of legs on each body segment
Millipede (face) Centipede (face)
Body plans for cup spidersand harvestman
PAGETWENTY
FIVE
MINIBEAST MODELS
MINIBEAST MODELS
You will need: 2 or 3 coffee cups and 4 or 5 straws.Cut around the pictures to complete your bug.
SPIDER
HARVESTMAN
Spider (face) Harvestman (face)
Harvestman (eyes)
Body plans for a cup fly
PAGETWENTY
SIX
MINIBEAST MODELS
MINIBEAST MODELS
You will need: 3 coffee cups and 6 straws.Cut around the pictures to complete your bug.
FLY
Fly (face)
Wings Fly Halters
Front WingsHalters(modified hind wings
Body plans for cup Bee or Wasp
PAGETWENTYSEVEN
MINIBEAST MODELS
MINIBEAST MODELS
You will need: 3 coffee cups and 6 straws.Cut around the pictures to complete your bug.
BEE/WASP Bee/Wasp (face)
Front Wings
Back Wings
ThoraxAbdomen
Head
Your class could devise and make their own Bug Show bymaking simple shadow puppets. An exciting way to stage it iswith the use of an overhead projector (OHP). Jacolly PuppetTheatre are a successful touring puppet company, and theyhave kindly shared some of their techniques that are easy touse in the classroom.You Will Need:-• A darkened room• An overhead projector (with protective sheet
of clear acetate covering the glass)• A projector screen (a blank wall or, if you
want to use a human actor as well, a cottonsheet about 2m sq. See Fig 1)
• Pencils & rubbers• Rough paper• OHP pens (various colours)• Sellotape• Scissors
For Puppets• Paper Fasteners (i.e. the kind that look like
tiny, metal clothes pegs!)• Thin wire for control rods
Silhouette Puppets• Card (postcard thickness)• Scraps of acetate
Coloured Shadow Puppets• Clear acetate sheets (postcard thickness)• Diamond Ultraclear Sellotape (which does
not show on acetate)
For Scenery• Card or stiff paper
Coloured Scenery• Sheets of clear acetate
PAGETWENTY
EIGHT
OHP SHADOW PUPPETS
OHP SHADOW PUPPETS
First make a template of the OHP glass to help you to decide the size of your puppets.Remember that the further away your projector is from the screen the larger your images willappear e.g. a 20 cm high puppet projected from 2 m away appears the size of a real-life adult!This is one trick that puppeteers can use to include people in their puppet plays. If you hanga cotton sheet about 2 m square and project the puppet from behind the sheet rather thanin front of the sheet, then the students can act behind the screen with the shadow from thepuppet. This is the one time that your class can talk to a human-sized ant!
A simple screen is made by hanging a thin white sheet. It is a good ideato weight the sheet (using wooden bars) and to hang the screen so that thebottom is just off the floor.
Most shadow puppets can be easily made from just card and acetate. We will show you some easy techniques to make silhouette and acetatepuppets, and how to joint them to really bring your minibeasts to life.
Drawing Copyright of Jacolly Puppet Theatre
PAGETWENTY
NINE
MAKING THE PUPPETS
MAKING THE PUPPETS
SILHOUETTE PUPPETSFirst ask the class to decide what puppet they want to make. They mayneed to draw a picture of the puppet first to visualise it. Remind themthat for any features to be seen they can’t be drawn onto the puppet,they will have to be cut out or cut around. You can add some colour toyour silhouette puppets by sticking an acetate picture behind the cardsilhouette.
Card silhouettesusually look best asa side view
The features donot show clearlyfrom the front
...unless youcut them out
Cut eye hole out offly’s head
Draw eye on acetate &colour with OHP pens
Cut out & tape overeye hole
MAKING A COLOURED EYE FOR SILHOUETTE PUPPET
Silhouette puppetsover acetate &paper scenery
Birds’ eye view ofsilhouette puppetsover acetate scenery
PAGETHIRTY
MAKING THE PUPPETS
MAKING THE PUPPETS
MAKING A SIMPLE ACETATE PUPPET Acetate puppets are easy to make as they are very similar to thepictures that the students have already drawn. Ask the class to drawthe outline of their insect onto an acetate sheet. This can be colouredin with OHP pens and cut out. It is helpful if the central part is coveredwith card so that a control rod can be taped onto the body. Think aboutwhich way you will need to tape the control rod! Will your insect beflying from the top of the projector, or moving around in the grass at thebottom of the projector?
Add the pictures and text from the sheet.
Use an OHP pen to draw or tracethe outline of butterfly onto anacetate sheet
Colour the wings with OHP pens,cover body with card andcut out
Make the control rod out of thin wire and tape it onto the body
JOINTING YOUR PUPPETDecide what actions your puppet needs to perform in your play. You cangive your puppet movement by jointing it: But remember that it is hard towork more than two control rods at a time.
Cut out sections & make holes for fasteners. Fix wire control rods on tohead and abdomen with strong tape. Join section together, as shownabove, with paper fasteners
PAGETHIRTY
ONE
MAKING THE PUPPETS
MAKING THE PUPPETS
It would be complicated to make all 14 sections of a woodlouse’s legsmove separately, but just moving the three jointed sections of thispuppet woodlouse can give the impression that they do!
If you want to make a very supple minibeast, it needs lots of joining.This maggot can easily be adapted to make, say, a caterpillar or millipede.
NB Although it is made in twelve segments, this maggot still only needs twocontrol rods!
PAGETHIRTY
TWO
MAKING THE PUPPETS
MAKING THE PUPPETS
SCENERYThe students may prefer to draw some scenery. This can be made byusing an acetate sheet slightly larger than OHP glass, draw and colourthe scenery with OHP pens. To add further drama to your scenery,frame your acetate sheet with silhouette shapes. Use a piece of cardas big as the projector, and cut tree or grass shapes around theoutside of the card to give the puppets a “stage” to perform in. Paperleaves can be cut and taped to surround the coloured acetate scenery.
SUGGESTED ADDITIONAL MATERIALSYou can also experiment making your puppets and scenery withfeathers, fur, net, lace, coloured cellophane, ferns & grasses.
Points to Remember
• the OHP mirror will reverse the image you lay on the glass (i.e.your puppet will face in the opposite direction. Experiment andsee!)
• Before fastening your paper puppet together, decide which way itis to face. Insert fasteners with the sharp ends away from theglass.
• As in a film, you can have close-ups (e.g. make a bug’s headnearly fill the whole screen) or long shots (e.g. a swarm of bugs inthe distance)
• To make your bug’s wings look translucent, make out of acetate &decorate with OHP pens.
• Make the puppets’ control rods long enough so that thepuppeteer’s hands are not seen over the glass when they aremoving the puppet.
• Check your OHP before you use it, does it get hot? You shoulduse heat resistant materials if it is warm.
Peter Smithers and Jacolly Puppet Theatre have created a setof scripts especially for classroom use. The scripts can eitherbe used for the class to perform their own shadow puppetshow (don’t forget you’ll need someone to work the puppetand someone to be the voice of the insect) or the class couldact out the characters in a short play.
On and the Roller Ball Crewis a full eight-page script, that can be downloaded as PDFs from
the BBSRC website www.bbsrc.ac.uk/schools. This script has alsobeen adapted into three smaller scripts.
Lunch-time with On and the Roller Ball Crewis a three-page script that deals with how different insects eat,
with six characters.
Leglessis a two-page script that deals with classification and grouping,
but looking at the number of legs, with five characters.
On the balllooks at different types of woodlice, through a lively two-page
script based around football. This script will be useful to introduceclassification in science. You could also include this in assembliesthat have a citizenship angle as there may be close parallels withpeople or things being the same even though they act differently orlook different.
PAGETHIRTYTHREE
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY
Jacolly Puppet Theatre present “Real Bugs”
NARRATOR: Oniscus the woodlouse is out hunting for some high quality rotting leavesbefore the day becomes too hot for him.
[MUSICIANS: accompany song in blues style] ON: (Ambles in, singing.)
I woke up this morning, I was hungry as a hog.I went over to the compost heap Icould almost eat a log. Wanted some rotten leaves, but the ones there wereall new. Oh, Oh, Oh, I got those rotten leaf blues.
NAR: On has to find leaves that are just right as, if they are too fresh, they are toughas old boots. But if they are too old they have too much fungus growing onthem and they taste terrible. So he has to find just the right patch where theleaves are perfect.
[SOUND EFFECTS: walking on dead leaves].ON: (On wanders along looking at leaves and turning them over. )
This one may be OK. But no. It’s too far gone. Ah! How about this one?No. It’s too new.
MARGO: (Pops her head out of the leaves in front of ON.)Hold it right there!
ON: Who are you?MARGO: Who are you? more like! And what are you doing?ON: I’m Oniscus, and I am searching for rotten leaves.MARGO: Leaves, is it! Are you sure it’s leaves you’re after?ON: Of course I’m sure. I am a woodlouse.MARGO: I’ve heard about woodlice. Weird creatures that eat
rotten leaves.ON: That’s what I said.MARGO: Don’t get clever with me. I’m just guarding my dead mouse.ON: Whatever turns you on. (Exits).MARGO: (Vanishes back into the leaves)
[SOUND EFFECTS: Slurping, gobbling]
PAGETHIRTYFOUR
Lunch-time with On and the Roller Ball Crew. 1Written by Peter Smithers & Jacolly Puppet Theatre
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY - Lunch-time with On and the Roller Ball Crew 1
CAST
Puppets/Puppeteers ONISCUS, a woodlouse
ARMADELIDIUM, another kind of woodlouseMARGO, a maggotSPECK, a butterflyDYSDERA, a woodlouse-eating spider
Scenery(card/paper/coloured acetate with fabricleaves)
Voices NARRATORONISCUS, a woodlouseARMADELIDIUM, another kind of woodlouseMARGO, a maggotSPECK, a butterflyDYSDERA, a woodlouse-eating spider
Sound effect producers
PAGETHIRTY
FIVE
Lunch-time with On and the Roller Ball Crew. 2
NAR: Well, that’s Margo the maggot for you. She’s really tucking intoher rotting mouse.
ON: (Re-enters) Listen to that maggot. What a messy eater.And she’ll be even worse when she grows into a fly.
NAR: When maggots turn into flies they are sick all over their food before they eat it.
SPECK: (Flies in and flutters around above ON.) Hi there, On! How are you today?
ON: Oh hello, Speck. I’m fine. Just out looking for some nice, rotting leaves.
SPECK: I don’t know what you see in them. Give me some fresh nectar any day.
ON: It’s OK for you high fliers, sipping those exotic cocktails. But us workers haveto keep our strength up, so it’s good, old-fashioned plain food for me.
SPECK: Oniscus, you need to get out more. Bye. (Exits)
ON: (Watches Speck fly off then bumps into the large BALL)
AR: My name’s Armadelidium but most people call me Armie.
ON: I’m Oniscus. On for short.
AR: Hullo
ON: How do you roll into a ball like that? None of my family can.
AR: Really? Well, I guess we’re different types you and me. All of my family can.It’s a great trick. If anyone tries to eat you, just roll into a ball and you aresafe as houses.
ON: Impressive! What's all that noise.
AR (Enters, terrified) A Dys! It’s a Dys! A woodlouse spider. It will have usall for breakfast. Quick. Hide. I’m going to roll into a ball.
(Exit left)
ON: Hide? Good plan! (Dives under rock).
NAR: Just in time, Oniscus hides under a rock.
DYS: (Enters, crawling down side of screen. Exits left. Immediately re-enters
pushing in BALL (AR) which it then attacks)
[SOUND EFFECTS: scraping noises].
NAR: The spider tries to bite the rolled-up woodlouse but itsfangs just slide off the hard carapace ~ the woodlouse’shard, protective back.
DYS: (Enraged.) Haaaaaah! Let me get at you! I’m hungry!
NAR: Just then…
ON: (Peers out from under the rock).
NAR: …the spider sees ON
DYS: Ah! What’s this? (Moving towards ON) A woodlouse that can’t roll up!
ON: (Backs away up the rock, terrified).
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY - Lunch-time with On and the Roller Ball Crew 2
PAGETHIRTY
SIX
Lunch-time with On and the Roller Ball Crew. 3
DYS: You look tasty! (Jumps at ON) Ha!
ON: Oooo er! (Turns around and runs up the side of the screen, along the top,and back down the other side)
DYS: (Pursuing ON around the screen. Sweetly coaxing )Don't go, my friend. No need to be afraid.
NAR: Woodlice can’t usually run very fast but, fortunately, to-day …
(ON scrambles over BALL and dives under rock.)
…Oniscus escapes back to safety. Dysdera, the spider, is too big to followhim under the rock …
(DYS crashes into the rock and bounces back onto the ground.)
[SOUND EFFECTS: dull thud]
DYS: Ouch!!
NAR: … and crashes into the side of the rock, instead
DYS: (Yells to ON) Come out! (Yells to BALL) Unroll so that I can eat you!(In disgust, kicks BALL offstage) Idiot! At this rate, I’ll starve (Exits)
ON: (Pokes head out from under the rock) Phew! (Calls to AR)Nice one, Armie! She’s gone!
AR: (Enters) I hate that almost eaten feeling. I could feel her fangsscraping on my carapace.
ON: What was it?
AR: Dysdera are spiders whose favourite food is woodlice.
ON: Us!
AR: If you are not rolled up tight they can spear you right through themiddle with those huge fangs.
ON: Gross! I’m out of here. I’ll just …(Starts to dig in ground)
[SOUND EFFECTS: scuffling in leaves]
take this (Pulls LEAF up from below ground and, with an effort, starts todrag it up over the top of the rock) Nice leaf. Thanks. ‘Bye!. (Exits)
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY - Lunch-time with On and the Roller Ball Crew 3
CAST
Puppets/PuppeteersONISCUS, a woodlouseGLOMERUS, a pill millipedeARMADELIDIUM, another kind of woodlouseINSECTA, an insect (maybe a butterfly, aground beetle or a ladybird)
Scenery (card/paper/coloured acetate with fabricleaves)
VoicesONISCUS, a woodlouseGLOMERUS, a pill millipedeARMADELIDIUM, another kind of woodlouseINSECTA, an insect (maybe a butterfly, aground beetle or a ladybird)NARRATOR
Sound effect producers
PAGETHIRTYSEVEN
Legless 1Written by Peter Smithers & Jacolly Puppet Theatre
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY - Legless 1
There are leaves on the ground and a ball centre stageNARRATOR: AR has taken ON to meet another minibeast who may be able to help ON
find some good rotting leaves.(Enter ON and AR who wander over to the ball and tap on it)
[SOUND EFFECTS: light tapping]AR: Wake up Glom , you lazy thing. The day began hours ago.
GLO: (Muffled) Push off. Leave me alone.
AR: (Taps GLOM again)
[SOUND EFFECTS: LIGHT TAPPING]
Hey! We want your advice.
GLO: (Less muffled, as begins to unroll) Oh alright, alright. (Unrolls facing AR)
AR: Meet Oniscus.
GLO: On what?
ON: (Enters on top of rock) On - iscus.
GLO: (Turns around to face ON). What! You’re just a woodlouse! Why should I want tomeet a sad little woodlouse!
NAR: This gets On a little cross.
ON: So what's your problem then, mate. What makes you so different?
AR: (Exits, backwards)
(As they argue, GLOM marches around and ON shuffles up and down the rock)
GLO: (Outraged) What makes me different from you? How dare you! I’m not awoodlouse! I am a millipede. A pill millipede, if you must know.My family name is Glomerus and we millipedes are far more importantthan you common woodlice.
ON: So what's the big deal with being a millipede then, you great compostchomper!
PAGETHIRTYEIGHT
Legless 2
NAR: Oh dear. On is getting really mad now.
GLO: We millipedes have two legs on each of our many segments,unlike you coarse crustacea. How many legs have you got?
ON: Fourteen
GLO: Only fourteen legs! And so few segments! Pathetic! Face it.I’m a superior life form!
ON: What! (Shuffles to & fro making strange stuttering noises)
NAR: This makes poor On so angry he doesn’t know what to say. And Glom justlooks smug…
GLO: Huh! (Exits)
NAR: …and marches off into the wood.
ON: Well! How rude. There was really no need for any of that"
AR: (Re-enters) Sorry about that! Glomerus has been a bit strange about thisleg thing lately. But he does know how to find the best leaves. There mustbe some specially tasty rotting leaves near here. Let’s look.
INS: I can help you to find the food, I’m very good at finding food andI’m very important.
NAR: We know that there are many different kinds of minibeast and the number oflegs that they have varies from 6 to over a hundred. Having more legs does notmake them more important as they are all important. Without them the worldwould come to a halt.
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY - Legless 2
CAST
Puppets/PuppeteersONISCUS, a woodlouseBOMBUS, a beeARMADELIDIUM, another kind of woodlouse
Scenery(card/paper/coloured acetate with fabricleaves)
Voices ONISCUS, a woodlouseBOMBUS, a beeARMADELIDIUM, another kind of woodlouseNARRATOR
Sound effect producers
PAGETHIRTY
NINE
On the Ball 1Written by Peter Smithers & Jacolly Puppet Theatre
There are leaves on the ground and a ball centre stageNARRATOR: ON is out for a walk in the woods as part of his football trainingON: (Enter On who wanders along then bumps into the ball)
[SOUND EFFECTS: bump!]
ON: Ouch! What's this? Hey this could be good. I can get in some practice forthe match on Saturday. (Rolls the ball around and then pretends he is playingfootball, butting the ball higher and higher into the air.)
[SOUND EFFECTS: the BALL always lands with a bump]
NAR: On the woodlouse has bumped into some kind of ball. Oh. Nice try, Oniscus!
BOM: (Off) Zzzzzz! Zzzzzzzz!
NAR: Uh Oh! That sounds like Bombus the Bee. He’s always fancied himselfas a football commentator
BOM: (Flies in. Buzzes around screen, excited. Gets increasingly louderand faster) Zzzzzzzzz! …And On takes the ball in a decisive tackle!
[SOUND EFFECTS: lots of cheering from the crowd]
He flies down the wing, weaving between defenders. What a performer.Look at this woodlouse go!
ON: (Heads BALL off screen).
BOM: He is past the backs and it’s in the net.
[SOUND EFFECTS: crowd’s final roar of approval]
What a goal! Zzzzzzzzz! (Exits)
ON: (Bows to imaginary audience) Thank you, fans.
AR: (Off) Oi! Leave it out mate.
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY - On the Ball 1
ON: Who said that?
AR: (Enters from side BALL had been kicked into) Me, you dumbcrustacean.
NAR: To On's surprise the ball has turned out to be another woodlouse.
AR: Will you stop kicking me around. It's not polite.
ON: Sorry mate. I didn't realise there was anyone in there. Who are you?
AR: My name’s Armadelidium but most people call me Armie.
ON: I’m Oniscus. On for short.
AR: Hullo
ON: How do you roll into a ball like that? None of my family can.
AR: Really? Well. I guess we’re different types you and me. All of my family can.It’s a great trick. If anyone tries to eat you, just roll into a ball and you aresafe as houses.
ON: Impressive!
AR: Do you play football for a team?
ON: Yes. I play for the Compost Kings. How about you?
AR: No. Not me. I always feel sorry for the ball.
PAGEFORTY
On the Ball 2
PERFORMING YOUR OWN PLAY - On the Ball 2
You may like to find out more information aboutminibeasts using the internet. These sites have beenrecommended by the entomologists (insect specialists) atthe University of Plymouth.
FLORIDA BUG CLUBAn American web site for young bug hunters.http://bugweb.entnem.ufl.edu/bugclub/
AES BUG CLUBThe site for British bug hunters. It contains information on Britishbugs and details of activities organised by the Bug Club.http://www.exeter.ac.uk/bugclub/main.html
AES (Amateur Entomological Society)http://www.theaes.org/
GORDONS ENTOMOLOGICAL PAGE.THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF INSECTSLots of information on a wide range of minibeasts.http://www.insect-world.com/six.html
BRITISH TARANTULA SOCIETYHow to keep Tarantulas and news of where to go and see them.http://www.bts.ndirect.co.uk/
BRITISH DRAGONFLY SOCIETYAll about dragonflies in the UK.http://www.dragonflysoc.org.uk/
ANT CAST the web window on the life of ants.Live video footage from an ant colony.http://www.nhm.ac.uk/museum/creepy/antcastintro.html
NAT HIST MUSEUM CREEPY CRAWLY EXHIBITIONA guide to the Bugs exhibit at the Natural History Museum London.http://www.nhm.ac.uk/museum/creepy/index.html
MARK WATSONS STICK INSECT PAGEAll about Stick insects.http://members.aol.com/fluffymark/home.htm
YOUNG ENTOMOLOGIST SOCIETYhttp://members.aol.com/YESbugs/bugclub.html
ORIGAMI: THE ARTHROPODAThis page contains origami bugs, spiders, and crustaceans.Jasper's Origami Menagerie (USA)http://www.folds.net/menagerie/arthropoda.html
PAGEFORTY
ONE
Information for bug hunters on the internet.
MINIBEAST WEB SITES
Minibeast Web Sites
FICTIONAUTHOR PUBLISHER ISBN
PICTURE BOOKSVery Hungry Caterpillar Eric Carle Puffin 0140500871Bad Tempered Ladybird Eric Carle Puffin 0140503986Beetle in the Bathroom Brian Moses Puffin 0140567046Scritch Scratch Miriam Moss Orchard 1841211125The Hoppameleon Paul Geraghty Red Fox 0099408538Snail Trail Ruth Brown Anderson 0862649498Ladybird Ladybird Ruth Brown Anderson 1842700405Tiny Paul Rogers Bodley Head 0370326326
[illustrated by Korky Paul]EARLY READERSLittle Bug series: Damon Burnard Hodder
I. Cindy Centipede 03407877832. Wally Woodlouse 03407877913. Lilly and the Ladybirds 03407878054. Danny Longlegs 0340787813
Emily's Legs Dick King- Smith Hodder 0340854081Spinderella Julia Donaldson Egmont 1405200723Leon Loves Bugs Dyan Sheldon Walker 074457790XOmnibombulator Dick King-Smith Transworld 0552527998Little Stupendo Jon Blake Walker 074459023X
LONGER READSHarry the Poisonous Centipede Lyn Reid Banks Harper Collins 0006751970Harry the Poisonous Centipede'sBig Adventure Lyn Reid Banks Harper Collins 0006755356Charlotte's Web E.B.White Puffin 0140364498Invasion of the Vampire Spiders Susan Gates Puffin 014131074XSpid Ursula Moray Williams Red Fox 0099408538Bug Muldoon and the Garden of Fear Paul Shipton 0.U.P. 019275274X
POETRYMinibeasts chosen by Brian Moses Mac 033037057XMini Beasties chosen by Michael Rosen Puffin 0140544909
There are also some excellent books about insects.Libby Allman, a Children’s Book Specialist at In Other WordsBookshop Ltd, has compiled a list of Fiction and Non-FictionBooks. You can contact the bookshop by writing toLibby Allman at In Other Words Ltd, 64 Mutley Plain,Plymouth, PL4 6LF, phoning 01752 663889 or [email protected].
PAGEFORTYTWO
MINIBEAST BOOK LISTS
Minibeast Book Lists
INFORMATION BOOKSEyewitness Explorer :Insects Dorling Kindersley 0751360953
Eyewitness Readers-Bugs, Bugs, Bugs Dorling Kindersley 0751358576Busy Buzzy Bee Dorling Kindersley 0751362107Spiders Secrets Dorling Kindersley 0751345989
Usborne Beginners - Spiders 0746045425
Lift the Flap-Bugs and Slugs Usborne 0746027737
Big Bug Search Usborne 0746027036
Spotters Guides-Bugs and Insects Usborne 0746040717
Fly Traps Walker 0744562740
Caterpillar Caterpillar Walker 0744536367
Oxford Reds- Spiders O.U.P. 0199106894
Best Book of Creepy Crawlies Kingfisher 0753403099
Question Time Creepy Crawlies Kingfisher 0753406276
Are You a Ladybird? Kingfisher 075340530X
Are You a Snail? Kingfisher 0753406683[Up the Garden Path Series]
Awesome Facts about Bugs Watts 0749639385
Awesome Facts about Spiders Watts 0749639326
I wonder why Spiders Spin Webs Kingfisher 0753407523Looking at Minibeasts [series]
Ladybirds and Beetles Belitha 1841383902
What's Creepy and Crawly? Frances Lincoln 0711218889
Usborne Discovery BUGS Usborne 0746046944
Mega Bites Bugs Dorling Kindersley 0751330817
Horrible Science: Ugly Bugs Scholastic 0590558080
Horrible Science: Microscopic Monsters Scholastic 0439995019
USEFUL KEYS FOR MINIBEAST IDENTIFICATION.
The Woodland Name Trail. Ann & John Bebbington and Steve Tilling. Published by the Field StudiesCouncil. A simple flow chart on a fold out card that identifies the main minibeast groups.
Minibeasts. An Identification Guide. Peter Smithers and John Walters. (available mid 2003). A more in depthflow chart that identifies all minibeast groups using easily observed features, with information about each ofthem.
A Key to the Terrestrial Invertebrates of the British Isles. Steve Tilling. Published by the Field Studies Council.An in depth scientific key for those who wish to take a scientific approach to minibeast identification. Itcontains information on the ecology of each group and references to other books that give more informationabout them.
PAGEFORTYTHREE
MINIBEAST BOOK LISTS
Minibeast Book Lists